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  • Mourners weep as the repatriation cortege carrying British servicemen is driven through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010. Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett023.jpg
  • Mourners weep as the repatriation cortege carrying British servicemen is driven through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010. Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett022.jpg
  • Mourners weep just before the repatriation cortege carrying British servicemen is driven through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010.  Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett015.jpg
  • A pallbeare leads the cortege carrying British servicemen through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010. <br />
Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett019.jpg
  • Mourners weep as the repatriation cortege carrying British servicemen is driven through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010. Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett024.jpg
  • Mourners weep just before the repatriation cortege carrying British servicemen is driven through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010. Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett018.jpg
  • Mourners weep as the repatriation cortege carrying British servicemen is driven through the town of Wootton Bassett in western England, June 29, 2010. Pic: Paul Hackett
    Wootton Bassett025.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_P_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_O_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_N_1.jpg
  • Lancaster bomber fly past drops tousands of poppies onto the crowds below. Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_L_1.jpg
  • Sitting in the shade of a tree, veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_K_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_E_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_D_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_Z_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_W_1.jpg
  • A row or Royal Artillery horsemen during the annual Trooping of the Colour parade in the Mall. With swords drawn, the row of fine horse mounted soldiers parade along the Mall towards the parade ground at Horseguards. The Royal Regiment of Artillery, commonly referred to as the Royal Artillery (RA), is the artillery arm of the British Army. Despite its name, it comprises a number of regiments. The introduction of artillery into the English Army came as early as the Battle of Crécy in 1346
    royal_artillery-20-06-1991_1.jpg
  • Young girls walk past soldiers from the Coldstream Guards (from nearby Windsor barracks and deploying to Afghanistan later this year) after a day's racing during the annual Royal Ascot horseracing festival in Berkshire, England. Royal Ascot is one of Europe's most famous race meetings, and dates back to 1711. Queen Elizabeth and various members of the British Royal Family attend. Held every June, it's one of the main dates on the English sporting calendar and summer social season. Over 300,000 people make the annual visit to Berkshire during Royal Ascot week, making this Europe’s best-attended race meeting with over £3m prize money to be won.
    royal_ascot76-19-06-2013_1.jpg
  • Formally-dressed gentlemen donate coins to soldiers from the Coldstream Guards (from nearby Windsor barracks and deploying to Afghanistan later this year) <br />
during the annual Royal Ascot horseracing festival in Berkshire, England. Royal Ascot is one of Europe's most famous race meetings, and dates back to 1711. Queen Elizabeth and various members of the British Royal Family attend. Held every June, it's one of the main dates on the English sporting calendar and summer social season. Over 300,000 people make the annual visit to Berkshire during Royal Ascot week, making this Europe’s best-attended race meeting with over £3m prize money to be won.
    royal_ascot75-19-06-2013_1.jpg
  • The RAF Bomber Command Memorial is a memorial in Green Park in London, near Hyde Park Corner, commemorating the aircrews of RAF Bomber Command who embarked on missions during the Second World War.
    20120723bomber command memorial_C_1.jpg
  • The RAF Bomber Command Memorial is a memorial in Green Park in London, near Hyde Park Corner, commemorating the aircrews of RAF Bomber Command who embarked on missions during the Second World War.
    20120723bomber command memorial_A_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_Y_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_V_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_U_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_S_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_Q_1.jpg
  • Lancaster bomber fly past drops tousands of poppies onto the crowds below. Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_M_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_I_1.jpg
  • Wearing hats made from pages from a newspaper, veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_H_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_G_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_F_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_C_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_B_1.jpg
  • Exterior of the Moth Club building with a Carling Black Label larger sign on the 20th September 2019 in London in the United Kingdom.
    DR_Moth_Club-1044127.jpg
  • Two US Navy sailors walk past the statue of first President George Washington outside the Federal Hall National Memorial on Wall Street, New York City. A male and female personnel walk past this famous American landmark to see for themselves the site of many a notorious economic boom and crash. Federal Hall, built in 1700 as New York's City Hall, later served as the first capitol building of the United States of America under the Constitution, and was the site of George Washington's inauguration as the first President of the United States. It was also where the United States Bill of Rights was introduced in the First Congress. The building was demolished in 1812.
    wall_street43-25-05-2014_1.jpg
  • The RAF Bomber Command Memorial is a memorial in Green Park in London, near Hyde Park Corner, commemorating the aircrews of RAF Bomber Command who embarked on missions during the Second World War.
    20120723bomber command memorial_B_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_X_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_T_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_R_1.jpg
  • Veterans and their families gather in Green park for a service to watch as the memorial to the 55,573 airmen of Bomber Command who died during World War II was unveiled. Some 6000 attended the ceremony. Criticism of large-scale area bombing by the RAF near the end of WWII had stalled plans for a memorial for years. London, England, UK.
    20120628veterans bomber command_A_1.jpg
  • A serving soldier in civilian suit but wearing a red beret of the Royal Military Police (RMP), looks poignantly down on markers that symbolise war dead, hundreds of crosses and poppies mark anonymous fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during recent conflicts. Dedications from loved-ones or simply well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses on the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers a laid on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance18-07-11-2009.jpg
  • On the tarmac of RAF Northolt, a military and VIP airfield in north London, the recently-deceased body of Diana Princess of Wales is borne on the six shoulders of an RAF pallbearer guard, her coffin carried away from the Royal Air Force (BAe) 146 jet belonging to the Queen's flight used by members of the Royal family to travel to location around the country. Draped in the Royal Standard which is the flag used by Queen Elizabeth II in her capacity as Sovereign of the United Kingdom. The servicemen are in full ceremonial uniforms and wear immaculate white gloves to handle this very solemn occasion in British history. Their duty as servants to the crown being respectful and professional.
    diana_coffin-31-08-1997_1.jpg
  • A young man who is interested in joining the British army has dropped in to a recruiting office in Central London. Sitting in front of an action picture of serving soldiers already living their own adventurous dream for Queen and country. They are on manoeuvres with a tank and others in support from the same platoon in the background. The lad is reading every word a brochure published by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) called Infantry Soldier which will give him the facts about the job and answer his questions regarding a new career. With squeezes on the budgets for supplying servicemen's equipment, this young recruit may not find realities of life in the armed services as idyllic as is suggested on paper.
    army_recruit-25-07-1996_1.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 25th May 2013. Lee Horton (36) in the Kings Arms pub after visiting the memorial to Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich, London, UK. Horton, now in the security business was in a gunner in British Army Artillary, and now raising money along with many other servicemen for the charity Help for Heroes. The Kings Arms became a landmark in the area after is was bombed by the IRA in 1974.
    20130525lee horton woolwichE.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 25th May 2013. Lee Horton (36) in the Kings Arms pub after visiting the memorial to Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich, London, UK. Horton, now in the security business was in a gunner in British Army Artillary, and now raising money along with many other servicemen for the charity Help the Heroes. The Kings Arms became a landmark in the area after is was bombed by the IRA in 1974.
    20130525lee horton woolwichB.jpg
  • The Cenotaph on Whitehall, central London. This memorial to those who gave their lives in World Wars I and II is the focus for England's remeberabce of those servicemen and women who died. The epitaph reads "The Glorious Dead".
    _MG_3422.jpg
  • The Cenotaph on Whitehall, central London. This memorial to those who gave their lives in World Wars I and II is the focus for England's remeberabce of those servicemen and women who died. The epitaph reads "The Glorious Dead".
    _MG_3420.jpg
  • WW1 Ovillers cemetery, the resting place of allied and commonwealth war dead from the Somme, France. Surrounded by summer corn fields, the scene is peaceful and idyllic, a landscape of rural France - far from the horrors of the battle fought here almost 100 years ago.<br />
There are now 3,440 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in the cemetery. 2,480 of the burials are unidentified but there are special memorials to 24 casualties believed to be buried among them. The battle was one of the largest of World War I, in which more than 1,000,000 men were wounded or killed, making it one of humanity's bloodiest battles.
    WW1_cemetery01-20-08-2003_1_1_1.jpg
  • Two serving soldiers in civilian suits but wearing the insignia and badges of the Royal Military Police (RMP), talk quietly together while poignantly paying their respects to the hundreds of markers that symbolise war dead. Crosses and poppies mark anonymous fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during recent conflicts. Dedications from loved-ones or simply well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses on the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers a laid on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance21-07-11-2009.jpg
  • A serving soldier in civilian suit but wearing a red beret of the Royal Military Police (RMP), looks poignantly down on markers that symbolise war dead, hundreds of crosses and poppies mark anonymous fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during recent conflicts. Dedications from loved-ones or simply well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses on the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers a laid on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance19-07-11-2009.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 25th May 2013. Lee Horton (36) in the Kings Arms pub after visiting the memorial to Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich, London, UK. Horton, now in the security business was in a gunner in British Army Artillary, and now raising money along with many other servicemen for the charity Help the Heroes. The Kings Arms became a landmark in the area after is was bombed by the IRA in 1974.
    20130525lee horton woolwichD.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 25th May 2013. Lee Horton (36) in the Kings Arms pub after visiting the memorial to Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich, London, UK. Horton, now in the security business was in a gunner in British Army Artillary, and now raising money along with many other servicemen for the charity Help the Heroes. The Kings Arms became a landmark in the area after is was bombed by the IRA in 1974.
    20130525lee horton woolwichA.jpg
  • From a height looking down on markers that symbolise war dead, one face of a young serviceman smiles from the other hundreds of crosses and poppies which mark some named but other anonymous fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during recent conflicts. Dedications from loved-ones or simply well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses on the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers a laid on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance09-07-11-2009.jpg
  • From a height looking down on markers that symbolise war dead, hundreds of crosses and poppies mark fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during the Iraqi conflicts from 2001 to present day. Dedications from loved-ones or well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses whose surfaces bear the names and pictures of smiling young men and women, proud to serve their country. On the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers are laid out on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance07-07-11-2009.jpg
  • From a height looking down on markers that symbolise war dead, hundreds of crosses and poppies mark fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during the Iraqi conflicts from 2001 to present day. Dedications from loved-ones or well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses whose surfaces bear the names and pictures of smiling young men and women, proud to serve their country. On the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers are laid out on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance05-07-11-2009.jpg
  • The Cenotaph on Whitehall, central London. This memorial to those who gave their lives in World Wars I and II is the focus for England's remeberabce of those servicemen and women who died. The epitaph reads "The Glorious Dead".
    _MG_3419.jpg
  • The Cenotaph on Whitehall, central London. This memorial to those who gave their lives in World Wars I and II is the focus for England's remeberabce of those servicemen and women who died. The epitaph reads "The Glorious Dead".
    _MG_3418.jpg
  • From a height looking down on markers that symbolise war dead, hundreds of crosses and poppies mark anonymous fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during recent conflicts. Dedications from loved-ones or simply well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses on the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers a laid on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended in on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance03-07-11-2009.jpg
  • From a height looking down on markers that symbolise war dead, hundreds of crosses and poppies mark anonymous fallen British soldiers and other servicemen and women, all killed during recent conflicts. Dedications from loved-ones or simply well-wishers are written on the wooden crosses on the weekend that Britain commemorates those killed on active service in trouble spots and war locations around the world, the markers a laid on the grass of Westminster Abbey's lawns on Parliament Square, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Armistice weekend is largely held on the closest Sunday to the 11th hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, when hostilities famously ended on 11th November 1918.
    remembrance01-07-11-2009.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 25th May 2013. Lee Horton (36) in the Kings Arms pub after visiting the memorial to Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich, London, UK. Horton, now in the security business was in a gunner in British Army Artillary, and now raising money along with many other servicemen for the charity Help the Heroes. The Kings Arms became a landmark in the area after is was bombed by the IRA in 1974.
    20130525lee horton woolwichC.jpg
  • Remembrance Sunday, 13th November 2011, Hackney, London. Poppy crosses and a wreath in the shape of a star from the Association of Jewish ex-Servicemen and Women.
    rem_0099.jpg
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